Today’s edition of quick hits.
* Crisis conditions in Lebanon: “The Israeli military is ‘deepening its operation’ in Lebanon, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Tuesday. Large forces have been deployed there, he said in a statement, to capture additional territory. Earlier on Tuesday, an Israeli military official confirmed that Israeli troops had operated beyond the so-called yellow line, which demarcated the area in southern Lebanon that Israel kept under its control during a cease-fire that went into effect in mid-April.”
* Russia’s war in Ukraine: “Russia pounded Kyiv and surrounding areas with hundreds of drones and missiles on Sunday in one of the heaviest bombardments of the city since the start of the four-year war, firing an Oreshnik hypersonic missile near the capital. Russia’s hours-long overnight barrage killed two people in Kyiv and two more in the surrounding area, and it wounded nearly 100, according to Ukrainian officials. Authorities said dozens of residential buildings and several schools had been damaged, many in the center of Kyiv.”
* Turkey takes fresh steps away from democracy: “Turkish riot police forced their way into the headquarters of the country’s main opposition party on Sunday, days after a court dismissed its leadership.”
* At the Vatican: “Pope Leo XIV made a historic apology on Monday for the role the Holy See played in legitimizing slavery and for having failed to condemn it for centuries, calling the Vatican’s record a ‘wound in Christian memory.’”








